[3][4] Ford never played in another major-league game, leaving him with an earned run average (ERA) of infinity for his lone appearance.
[5] After compiling a 3–6 record and 7.30 ERA as a pitcher in 1937, Ford played as an outfielder and first baseman for the remainder of his career.
[5] Ford's draft registration card of October 1940 indicates he was again attending Penn State,[6] and he was listed as a senior majoring in physical education in the college's 1941 yearbook.
[7] Ford later resided in Glassport, Pennsylvania; he owned a coal company in West Elizabeth and a golf course in Forward Township.
In 2003, research by Rick Benner of the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) discovered that Bill Ford's September 27, 1936, appearance had been incorrectly attributed to fellow-pitcher Gene Ford, who had appeared in one game for Boston earlier that year.